The UK Gambling Commission expects to form a working group to trial financial risk checks and is questioning plans to require gamblers to provide their job title for affordability assessments.
The gambling regulator is in the middle of the first tranche of its white paper consultations, with the next round expected around the end of November 2023.
Commission executive director Tim Miller said that after assessing responses and evidence, some areas it will look at include 鈥渢he real value of including job titles as part of financial risk checks", which was included as part of the consultation proposals.
Speaking on the 鈥淯K White Paper: Defining the Future鈥 webinar hosted by 91天堂原創 GamblingCompliance on Friday (September 15), Miller also said that the commission will look at 鈥渢he practical applications of the cross-selling requirements we are consulting on when it comes to land-based and there may need to be some flexibility in how they are applied there".
Feedback will also 鈥渓ikely鈥 see the formation of an expert working group that the commission is 鈥渓ooking to kick off shortly" that will look specifically at how to 鈥渙perationalise鈥 financial risk checks 鈥渋n a way to make sure they are effective and work well鈥.
鈥淎s part of this, the commission will look at exploring the possibility of piloting some of these changes before they come into force. We recognise particularly when you are reliant on technology and third parties like credit reference agencies that trialling these things first and ironing out any issues may be helpful.鈥
Miller predicts a 鈥渂umpy road ahead鈥 but is 鈥渃onfident that with operators we can find a route through to deliver policy objectives to be effective and frictionless鈥.
Questioned about what 鈥渇rictionless鈥 means to the Gambling Commission, Miller said it is about 鈥渢rying to ensure it doesn't put the burden on consumers to provide information鈥.
Sarah Fox, the deputy director of strategy, governance and performance at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS), said she sees frictionless 鈥渁s being nothing that puts up an obvious barrier in the way鈥 or 鈥渘othing beyond the normal way of working as a consumer in an online space鈥.
The possibility of having operators ask consumers to provide their job title to help with these checks appears to be unlikely, as Miller said this is an 鈥渁rea that will be looked back at鈥 after feedback from operators showed they do not currently routinely ask for this information.
Dan Waugh, a partner at Regulus Partners, said 鈥渢he best news I've heard is that this will be subject to a trial and pilot鈥, adding that 鈥渓arge-scale interventions affecting large amounts of consumers should be piloted鈥.
However, Bahar Alaeddini, a partner at law firm Harris Hagan, explained that 鈥渢he challenge remains the implementation of the government鈥檚 objective policy鈥, adding that there is a 鈥渨orrying disconnect between policy and practice鈥.
鈥淭he practical reality in the industry is a significant drop-off rate after asking for consent for credit reference agency, manual checks, or open banking,鈥 Alaeddini said.聽
She also has 鈥渟erious concerns鈥 about for changes to regulatory panels, in particular, the 鈥渇rightening鈥 possibility of adjudicators with just five years of legal experience during a period when the commission is 鈥渆scalating fines鈥.
鈥淢y view is this proposed change suggests the future is not bright because the regulatory panel is an important opportunity to challenge a decision. It is sometimes the only avenue of recourse when the commission is going against you. I acknowledge that it is a small and restricted avenue of recourse but it is an important one that shouldn鈥檛 be further eroded,鈥 Alaeddini said.
Miller responded by saying that many of the current commissioners have no legal experience and that the consultation will assess the responses and evidence it receives before making a final decision.
When it comes to the next steps for consultations, the DCMS is preparing to launch one on the proposed statutory levy 鈥渉opefully in the next few weeks鈥, according to Fox, which will cover the proposed formula for payments as well as its governance and logistics.
鈥淲e do need to bring in quite a constrained system in that we don鈥檛 have primary legislation to change the system, don't have new bodies to set up, don't have lots of resources to put to this. It is really about how do we turn the voluntary system on a statutory footing to start with and is there room for broader reforms in the future,鈥 Fox said.
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